A Beautiful Funeral: A Novel (Maddox Brothers Book 5)

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A Beautiful Funeral: A Novel (Maddox Brothers Book 5) Page 12

by Jamie McGuire


  Just as she began to push the door open, another nurse yanked on it from the inside, nearly running into us.

  “I was just bringing her sister in to—”

  “I’m sorry,” the nurse said. “No visitors at this time. NICU will be standing by. She’s having the baby tonight.” She shouldered past us, and I peeked in as the door slowly closed. Several more nurses were working feverishly around Abby, but I couldn’t see her. I caught just a glimpse of Travis, looking over his shoulder at me with fear in his eyes.

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  TAYLOR

  THE MOMENT THE WHEELS OF THE PLANE touched down at O’Hare in Chicago, I switched my phone off the airplane mode and watched as the messages filled my lock screen. Before we’d taken off, Dad said everyone was at the hospital with Travis and Abby. According to the messages, the baby still hadn’t arrived, but Abby was close.

  I scrolled down the partial messages before stopping at one and tapping the screen. It was a group message for Tyler, Falyn, Ellie, and me from Shepley.

  A federal agent will be at baggage claim to bring you all to the hospital. He’ll have a van, plate number 978 GOV. DO NOT get a ride with anyone else. Not even a cab. Will explain later.

  I frowned and looked back at my brother, holding up my phone. He was a few rows back but nodded, knowing what I meant. I tilted my phone to show Falyn, who was sitting across the aisle from Hollis and me with Hadley. She leaned over, squinting her eyes. She’d needed glasses for at least two years but refused.

  “Can you see it?” I asked.

  “Yes, I can see it,” she snapped back, confusing my need for her be informed with a dig.

  “Baby,” I began, but she was already looking out the window, hugging Hadley to her side.

  I sat back, resting my head against the headrest.

  “She’s just tired,” Hollis said.

  I patted his knee without making eye contact. We were all tired. It made me sad to hear Hollis trying to make excuses for why we didn’t listen to each other anymore. Somewhere along the way, we started hearing insults instead of questions. I sighed. I didn’t know how to fix it.

  The seat belt sign turned off, and a ding sounded over the PA system. Hollis jumped up, opening the bin and handing Hadley her carry-on to her before getting Falyn’s and mine. He made me prouder every day. Moving to Colorado Springs had made him into a little man, trying to take care of everyone.

  I hugged him to me, kissed his head, and then gestured to his sister. “I just got a text from Uncle Shep. Aunt Abby is having her baby, so they sent a driver. Don’t run off. Both of you stay where I can see you.”

  They nodded.

  “I mean it,” I continued. “It’s important. You can’t even go to the bathroom alone.”

  “What’s going on, Dad?” Hollis asked. “Does it have to do with Uncle Tommy?”

  “Yes, but we don’t know what.”

  They nodded again, trading glances.

  We moved in a slow line down the aisle and out of the fuselage, staying in one unit with Tyler’s family up the Jetway and into the terminal. I could tell Tyler was on edge, looking around with his family’s bags either on his back, over his shoulders, or being pulled by a handle. Ellie was holding their sleeping son, keeping his head steady on her shoulder.

  “What do you think’s going on?” Tyler asked me. He kept his voice low.

  I shook my head. “I don’t know. Sounds like Tommy wasn’t the only target.”

  “Like they’re after the family? Why?”

  I shrugged. “Could be a million reasons.”

  Tyler frowned. “You have a better imagination than I do. I can’t think of one.”

  “Dad was an investigator. Abby’s dad is a gambler. Remember when Trex came to question us about Travis and the fire? Everyone has an enemy. Maybe Travis or Abby inadvertently made the wrong one. Wasn’t she raised around mobsters in Vegas?”

  Tyler didn’t respond, but I could tell his thoughts were spinning.

  “Abby was raised around mobsters?” Ellie asked.

  “Sort of,” Falyn said. “They don’t really talk about it. She was born in Vegas. Her dad was a fairly famous poker player. Then he started losing, but he didn’t stop gambling. He lost everything and got in pretty deep with some loan sharks. Abby had to go to Vegas just before she and Travis got married to bail him out. They were going to kill him.”

  “Whoa,” Ellie said. “But she’s really good at poker, right? She went there to win the money?”

  Falyn nodded. “She won most of it.”

  “How did they get the rest of it?” Ellie asked.

  Falyn made a face, drifting off into thought. “I’m not really sure. Do you know?” she asked me.

  I shook my head. “They’ve never really said.”

  “You’ve never asked?” Ellie said.

  Tyler shook his head. “I figured if they wanted me to know, they’d tell me.”

  We arrived at baggage claim, looking at the screens.

  “Thirteen,” Falyn said, dragging Hadley by the hand.

  “Hold on,” Tyler said, trying to get a handle on their roller bags.

  “I can help,” a woman said with a smile. She was wearing dark slacks, a button-down shirt and a dark blazer, her sunglasses hanging from where the top button of her blouse was undone. She flashed her credentials that were clipped inside of her blazer and then tucked them away.

  My stomach felt sick, and I looked back at Falyn, who was watching Alyssa Davies’s eyes turned soft when she looked down at Hollis.

  “Cute kid,” Alyssa said. “I’ll be driving you to the Eakins hospital.”

  Taylor and Ellie were unfazed, but Falyn looked at me, confused and angry. Alyssa was the woman I’d taken home from the bar during the week Falyn and I had broken up. Falyn needed space, so I left for California to visit my brother Thomas in San Diego. He’d taken me to a local bar to cry in my beer, and I met Alyssa, Thomas’s colleague. A few weeks later, Alyssa ended up pregnant and gave me the opportunity to take full custody before opting for an abortion. She carried Hollis to term, and Falyn and I stood outside the hallway of a San Diego hospital while she labored and gave birth. The nurses handed my son to me, and Alyssa returned to her life without looking back.

  “Wait, wait, wait,” I said, holding up my hands. “You’re FBI?”

  “I am,” Alyssa said. “I realize this is somewhat awkward ...”

  “Somewhat awkward?” Falyn repeated.

  “But you’re in advertising. With Thomas,” I said, bewildered.

  Alyssa sighed. “You’re my assignment. I’m all you’ve got. If you ask me, I’m the best one for the job since I have slightly more invested in getting you from A to B in one piece than any other agent, and … I’m a badass.”

  Hollis smiled. Falyn pulled him against her front with her free hand, hanging on tightly to Hadley with the other. Alyssa—or Agent Davies—represented more of a threat to our family than our failing marriage did.

  “Can we see those credentials again?” Falyn asked.

  Alyssa pulled her ID until it unclipped from her pocket and handed it to Falyn. “Look it over, but please be quick. We don’t want to stay in one place too long.”

  Falyn studied the ID, and then handed it to me, glaring at Alyssa. “Do you even work with Thomas?”

  “Yes,” she said simply.

  “So you’re in advertising too?” I asked, handing her ID to Tyler.

  “No, Thomas is FBI,” Ellie said, realizing the truth as she said the words. “And you…” she trailed off, looking at Falyn with sympathetic eyes.

  Everything clicked, and all at once, every lie Thomas had ever told me boiled in my blood.

  Tyler offered the ID to Ellie, but she declined. “We should go. This is awkward as fuck,” he said.

  We followed a diligent Alyssa to a black van with dark windows. Tyler climbed into the back with Ellie. There was already a car seat ready for Gavin. As Tyler and Ellie struggled to strap i
n their unconscious toddler, Alyssa buckled in and checked all of her mirrors, radioing in to someone that we were all accounted for and en route.

  “Falyn,” I said, reaching for her hand. She yanked it away, and I clenched my teeth. “How in Christ’s name is this my fault?”

  “Shut up,” she hissed. From hairline to neckline, red splotches began to form. Her eyes watered like they always did when she was embarrassed.

  Alyssa wasn’t paying attention to our spat, but she did look in the rearview mirror at Hollis more than once. I was waiting for Falyn to catch her and say something, but when their eyes met, Falyn took the high road.

  Hollis, to my surprise, rested his head against Falyn’s shoulder. She put her arm around him, and both of them seemed to relax. Falyn ran her fingers through his hair, softly singing the same tune she’d sang to him the night we brought him home. Alyssa watched with curious eyes, without judgment or jealousy, like she was observing the passing cars.

  Hollis had no clue he’d just made my life a lot easier and his mom more at ease. Falyn leaned down to kiss his forehead and then looked out the window, still humming.

  I rested my arm at the top of the bench seat, turning around to face my brother. He and Ellie were both staring at me, and Gavin was still sleeping, his head propped against the side of the car seat with his mouth gaping open. Ellie offered an encouraging smile. We’d spent long nights talking after Falyn left. Ellie had been to therapy enough for all of us, and I’d benefitted from it. I’d told her more than once that her advice and friendship kept me going.

  Ellie reached up and placed her hand on my elbow, and I nodded to her in appreciation. It was nice to know she understood what a tense situation Falyn and I were in, and that she was right there with me.

  I tapped Falyn gently with my finger, and she instantly tensed. She didn’t turn to me, so I accepted that she wasn’t going to speak to me as long as Alyssa was in the car. “I love you,” I said, running my thumb along the skin between her shoulder and neck. She didn’t shrug me off, which was the first surprise, but then she turned to me and smiled. I figured I’d say it again, hoping to get an even better reaction. “No matter what. I love you.”

  A tear welled up in Falyn’s eye and spilled over onto her freckled cheek. I used my thumb to wipe it away and then held my palm against her face. She leaned into it, and my heart burst in my chest.

  Thank you, she mouthed.

  So that was it. She just needed Alyssa to know where she stood. Actions, not words. It made sense now why she wanted nothing to do with a quiet attempt to hold her hand. She needed a show. Women were exhausting. Ellie had tried to explain to me the logic for leaving and staying gone. It had made more sense to me to work things out together, but Ellie had assured me that it was better to try to gain some insight on the whys rather than to let my frustration lead to anger. Falyn’s reasons were always far deeper than I could understand, and sometimes deeper than she would admit. Things like needing control or leaving before she was left. Shame. Guilt. Or even worse—apathy. My brothers all seemed to get their wives better than I did, but Falyn kept me in the dark most of the time.

  I was desperate to understand her and for her to understand me. Just when I was beginning to lose faith, we would have a moment, and I would feel a flicker of hope. By the look in her eyes, I could see she felt that way, too. It was so much more than her being a bitch and me being dumb. It was two people who had lugged all of their baggage into a relationship trying to sift through their own shit to see the love that brought them together in the first place.

  I slipped my hand beneath her hair and began to rub her neck with my thumb and index finger. I used to do that when we’d sit on the couch and watch a movie after the kids fell asleep. It had been a long time since I’d been able to do that, and her tense muscles melted under my touch.

  Alyssa touched her radio. “I have a possible on my four o’clock, six back.” I couldn’t hear a reply, but Alyssa didn’t seem alarmed.

  “Someone is following us?” Hollis asked.

  Alyssa smiled. “Possibly, smarty pants.”

  “Is it the same guy who shot Uncle Tommy?”

  “No,” Alyssa responded.

  “How do you know?”

  “Because he’s in jail.”

  “How do you know?” Hollis asked again.

  “Hols,” Falyn said, tapping him.

  “Because I put him there myself,” Alyssa answered.

  “You did?” Hollis said, leaning against his seat belt. “How many people have you arrested?”

  “A lot.”

  “How many people have you shot?”

  I frowned. “C’mon, buddy.”

  Hollis waited for Alyssa to answer.

  “Only the ones I had to,” she said.

  Hollis sat back, impressed. He hesitated before asking his next question. “Has my Uncle Tommy ever shot anyone?”

  “Ask him yourself,” Alyssa said. Hollis was satisfied, but Alyssa wasn’t. “I like your name.”

  “Thanks,” he said.

  “What about mine?” Hadley asked.

  “Yours, too,” Alyssa said.

  “We should let Alyssa concentrate on driving,” Falyn said.

  Alyssa didn’t skip a beat. “I can do both.”

  The muscles in Falyn’s neck began to tense, and I looked for a sign that would tell us how many miles to Eakins.

  “If you think someone is following us, maybe you shouldn’t,” Falyn said.

  The moment the words came out of her mouth, she regretted them. Hollis looked up at her, surprised at her rudeness. Falyn and I had many late-night talks about what we would do if Alyssa wanted to be in Hollis’s life again or if he started asking questions. He knew Falyn wasn’t his biological mother, but he didn’t know more than that, and he certainly had no idea that the cool, gun-toting woman in the driver’s seat was the enigma he’d no doubt wondered about his whole life. Falyn didn’t really want to keep them from talking, but I knew it had to be hard for her.

  “I mean,” Falyn said, clearing her throat. “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t tell you how to do your job. You know better than me what you’re capable of.”

  “It’s fine,” Alyssa said, unaffected.

  Falyn’s apology won her big points with Hollis, and he snuggled up against her again.

  Alyssa exited off the highway, and I sat up, trying to see where we were. It definitely wasn’t Eakins. She drove three miles, turned down one road, and then another after another three miles, parking in a dirt driveway. She turned off the motor and tossed me the keys.

  “Stay put,” she said.

  “What are we doing?” Tyler asked. “This isn’t Eakins.”

  A red Corolla pulled up behind us, and Alyssa unholstered her side arm. “Hadley. Hollis. Close your eyes and cover your ears.”

  “What’s going on?” Hadley whined.

  “Just do it.”

  She stepped out and walked to the road.

  “What the hell?” Ellie said. “I’m uncomfortable with this, I—”

  A set of shots rang out, and I threw myself over my family. Tyler did the same. After another set of shots, the only sounds we could hear were the cicadas in the trees, and the crickets in the grass surrounding the van.

  The driver’s side door opened, and Alyssa climbed back in. She held her hand out to me, and I handed her the keys.

  “A little warning would have been nice,” I said.

  “Did you … did you shoot the people who were following us?” Hollis asked.

  “Well,” Alyssa said, starting the van, “to be fair … they shot at me first.” Hollis swallowed, and Alyssa backed out and drove toward the highway. She touched the small black apparatus in her ear. “Clean up on aisle five.” She waited for confirmation. “I got tired of waiting on you. Yes. We’re three less Carlisis. Three miles west and three miles north.” She smiled. “Thank you.”

  I was worried that as we passed the Corolla, the kids would see a grueso
me scene, so I covered their eyes, but each of the victims in the car had their shirts or a newspaper covering their heads. The moment we were out of range, I removed my hands from the kids’ eyes, and I patted Hollis’s shoulder and kissed the top of Hadley’s head.

  “Who the fuck are the Carlisis?” Tyler asked.

  “You’ll have answers when we get to our destination, I promise,” Alyssa said.

  “Did that just happen?” Falyn asked, breathing hard and holding onto the door. “What the hell is going on?”

  I shook my head, unable to answer. I wasn’t sure whether to be freaked out that our driver was the one-night stand who gave me full custody of my son, or that it made sense now why she’d done it, considering she was a trained killer, or that the woman I had once spent an entire night banging while she’d yelped like a dying poodle had just killed three people without blinking.

  “Thank God Gavin sleeps like me and not you,” Ellie said to her husband.

  Alyssa navigated the van to the on ramp, and we returned to the highway, gaining speed toward Eakins. Alyssa drove faster than she had since we’d left the airport, and I looked down at the passengers in the cars we passed. They had no idea that we’d just been involved in an execution just a few miles off the highway or that our driver was the executioner. I felt more uneasy the closer we got to Eakins.

  “What’s your total now?” Hollis asked.

  “Hollis!” Falyn shrieked.

  “Don’t answer that, Alyssa,” I said. Falyn craned her neck toward me. That was the first time I’d uttered Alyssa’s name in years, and it obviously didn’t sit well with my wife. “Agent Davies,” I corrected, and then swallowed.

  Alyssa chuckled.

  “What’s funny?” I asked.

  “You’re just a lot different than I remember.”

  “Yes, he’s sober … and clothed,” Falyn snapped.

  “Oh, my God,” Tyler said. “Is she …” he thankfully trailed off, not wanting to drop that bomb on Hollis.

  “Holy fuck,” Ellie said under her breath.

  I sunk back into my seat, reliving the moment I had come clean to Falyn all over again. It was even worse that she didn’t blame me since she’d been the one who’d asked for the break. Where Falyn hadn’t raked me over the coals, Ellie never missed an opportunity—not only to let me know how shitty it was that I slept with someone days after my girlfriend asked for some time to think but how ridiculous and flat-out gross it was that Falyn blamed herself.

 

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